Skip to content
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

iijg

אתר וורדפרס חדש

  • Mission
    • Mission Statement
    • Goals
    • Progress
    • Milestones
  • Research
    • Overview & Projects
    • Scottish Jewry
    • Village Jews
    • Associated Research
  • Teaching
    • Teaching & Academic Guidelines
    • Associated Programs
  • Awards
    • 2015 Mathilde Tagger Prize recipients
    • 2018 Chava Agmon Prize recipient
  • Jacobi
    • Jacobi Papers eBook
    • Jacobi Papers
    • Monographs
    • Manuscripts
    • Absoulute Generations
    • Man and His Work
    • Jacobi Library
    • In Memoriam
  • RESOURCES
    • Caplan Repository
    • Gorr Archive
    • NLI Collections
  • Technologies
    • Overview
    • Phonetic Matching
    • Digital Maps
  • Publications
    • Jacobi Papers eBook
    • Jacobi Papers
    • Parallel Lines by Dr. Neville Lamdan
    • Genealogy journal – Special Issue Jewish Genealogy
    • Scottish Jewry
    • Village Jews
    • Publications – Lectures on Genealogy
  • Events
    • Opening
    • 2022 WUJS Conference
    • 2018 Weizmann Conference
    • 2017 WUJS Congress
    • 2017 BAJS Conference
    • 2013 Lamdan Award
    • 2013 WUJS Congress
    • 2012 St. Petersburg
    • 2010 EAJS Congress
    • 2009 WUJS Congress
    • 2006 Symposium
    • Conferences Attended
  • About Us
    • Fact Sheet
    • Officers
    • Committees
    • Founding
    • Benefactors
    • Acknowledgement
    • Mailing List
    • Contact Us
    • Donate
      • Contributions
      • Appeal
  • Donate

IIJG Research

2006 | Sephardic DNA | Destroyed Communities | 2007 | Darbenai Kinship | 2008 | Ancona Networks | Sephardic Elites | Cervera Archives | 2009 | Riga Registers | Hungarian Protocols | 2010 |Hungarian Families | 2011 | Hapsburg Families | Spanish Extremadura | 2012 | Piotrków Trybunalski | 2013 | Jews of Pinczow  | Jews, Frankists and Converts  |  Jewish Community of Tarrega | 2014 |Vienna’s Jewish Upper Class | Hispano-Jewish Onomastics | 2015 | Modern Genealogy of Polish Jews | Reading Between the Lines |2016  | Reconstructing and Analyzing a Jewish Genealogical Network: The Case of the Roman Ghetto (17th-18th century)

Communal Protocols and the Daily Life of Hungarian Jews

This research project was conducted by Dr. Howard Lupovitch of the University of Western Ontario, who is one of a handful of scholars currently working on Hungarian Jewry with the requisite linguistic skills.

A central aim of the project was to create databases containing micro-biographies of Jews who lived in the 18th and 19th centuries in three major Hungarian Jewish communities – Pest, Óbuda, and Miskolc – using the vast and hitherto unexploited information to be found in the minute books (“Protocols”) and other records of these Jewish communities (on 1873, Óbuda and Pest combined to form Budapest). In the process, Dr. Lupovitch demonstrated how these sources can be used to provide insights into the life of the three communities whose records were examined and as starting-points for research into individual Jews.

In the introductory part of his Final Report, Dr. Lupovitch also made a strong case for a genealogical approach to Jewish history and sociology

Click here for the project outline.

Click here for the Final Report on this project.

Click here for Appendix 1 to the Final Report – Micro-biographies of Jews of Óbuda.

Click here for Appendix 2 to the Final Report – Micro-biographies of Jews of Miskolc.

Primary Sidebar

ZOOMINARS

Recordings of Bimonthly genealogy presentations
Click here

ABOUT US
CONTACT US
JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
DONATE

Search

International Institute for Jewish Genealogy and Paul Jacobi Center - Copyright © 2006 -2019

info@iijg.org - , POB 40083, Mevasseret Zion, 9140002, Israel